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- Title
Changes in Chilean identity: thirty years after the military coup.
- Authors
Larrain, Jorge
- Abstract
The objective of this article is to explore whether events, starting with the 1973 military coup and occurring during the seventeen-year-long dictatorship, have caused or influenced important changes in the Chilean national identity. After a brief theoretical discussion, an analysis is made of the upheavals that occurred in Chile during the last thirty years seeking to assess what tensions they have introduced within Chilean identity. As a consequence some changes are detected which can be seen at the level of public discourses on Chilean identity with the emergence or rekindling of military-racial, Catholic and entrepreneurial narratives. But the most important change that Chilean identity has suffered has to do with the development of an internal fracture stemming from the division introduced by the military regime. In so far as the contents of identity are concerned, the article focuses on the decline in acknowledgement of shared symbols of the nation, the persistence of a pervasive collective anxiety, a recurrence of belief in Chilean exceptionalism, and fading respect for politicians and democracy. These aspects are oddly coupled with rising belief in voluntarism and the possibility of sustained economic growth, increased resort to the market rather than political life as the site of recognition, acceptance of malaise as the price of economic progress and a remarkable centrality of human rights issues.
- Subjects
CHILE; CHILEAN politics &; government, 1973-1988; GROUP identity; NATIONAL character; NATIONALISM; IDENTITY (Psychology); HUMAN rights; ECONOMIC development; COUP d'etat, Chile, 1973
- Publication
Nations & Nationalism, 2006, Vol 12, Issue 2, p321
- ISSN
1354-5078
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/j.1469-8129.2006.00243.x